Every choice we make at Hims & Hers is in the pursuit of a single goal: help more people feel great.
It sounds simple, but our current healthcare industry makes it nearly impossible. It’s why more than 2.5M subscribers depend on us for a new experience. One where they’re treated like a person, instead of a patient.
Our Q4 and full year 2025 results are live and they are proof that when you put people at the center of health, more people want to engage. Here’s what to know:
- We’re growing. Hers is expected to eclipse $1B in revenue this year. Hims revenue grew nearly 30% year-over-year. We launched 3 new offerings in 3 months. And we're focused on scaling global key markets to expand access to high-quality care, which we believe will help us reach $1B in international annual revenue by 2030. Across new markets and new specialties, our business has never encompassed this many new high-impact verticals with the potential to exceed $100M in annual revenue.
- We’re more than any one treatment. Since our founding, people have pigeon-holed us based on specific categories. We’ve been known as a hair loss company. An ED company. Today, some may think of us as a GLP-1 company. The reality is that only a small minority of our subscribers are using a compounded GLP-1 treatment. While the cultural conversation changes over time, our value to customers remains the same. Weight Loss is proof of the power of our model and we believe that power is what defines our platform for millions.
- We’re creating a new era of consumer health. We see a future where people benefit from innovations in diagnostics, wearables, and data. Where AI can use that data to define and refine treatments and support clinical guidance. And where verticalized infrastructure more efficiently delivers personalized treatments. The first two pillars – stronger technology and deeper data – are advancing across the industry. We believe that innovation demands the third pillar: a scalable way to make the final step in healthcare more precise and more personal. We’re investing in our capabilities in all three.
Change is coming to healthcare. More on the progress we made this year here: https://t.co/L2V2hdlQNg
Important info here: https://t.co/KFmOZwNahF
@poiu477@DavieNorwood@D_G_II@guyfromohio2@megynkelly@grok@grok Did Martin Luther King encourage his followers to physically get in people's faces, harass them, shout vulgar things at them, scare them, obstruct their daily lives or intrude into private spaces?
@poiu477@D_G_II@guyfromohio2@megynkelly MLK engaged in speeches and peaceful public marches. He rejected the behavior you are arguing for as counterproductive to the cause.
@poiu477@D_G_II@guyfromohio2@megynkelly NO! That's the definition leftist activists and anarchists are pushing. The point of a protest is for a people to peacefully make their views on an issue known. Not to get in people's faces, harass them, scare them, obstruct their daily lives or intrude into private spaces.
@poiu477@guyfromohio2@megynkelly No. The point of a protest is for a group of people to make their views on an issue publicly known. Not to get in people's faces, harass them, scare them, and intrude into private spaces.